THE NEW YORKER school secretary, came in and said some- thing to him, very low. Mr. Heintze looked at Mr. Carlstrom, and then shook hands with him; I think now that he looked at us, too, and would have liked to shake hands with each of us. Then he went out. Mr. Carlstrom told us we might as well start doing our homework for the next day. Mr. Heintze didn't come back. Lieutenant Vigneron relieved Mr. Carlstrom at the end of the hour, and worked us so fiercely over our French that we forgot all about getting out of fifteen minutes of math. We remembered it the next morn- ing, because there was an item in the papers. Mr. Heintze had been arrest- ed and sent to a detention camp. It seems he was a German artillery cap- tain who had been captured while de- fending his battery with extraordinary bravery. He had escaped from a prison camp somewhere in France, and hid- den on a British cargo boat. The boat, unfortunately, had put off sailing for two weeks, during which time Captain Heintze had lived on some chocolate and a handful of raisins. Our class was pretty proud of itself. He had been in our room when they came for him. Mr. Carlstrom said that "they" were two federal agents in plain clothes; they had wanted to come upstairs and take him out of the room. But of course Dr. Koenig had cheated us out of that delightful ex- citement; he had told the detectives to wait in his office; he had said that Mr. Heintze would not resist or try to run away, because Mr. Heintze knew that to do that might start shooting in a building full of children. So Mr. Heintze had gone down to the office, and they had taken him away. We were pretty proud of Mr. Heintze; We said hastily that he was a Saxon, and therefore not a real Ger- man at all; but what we thought of most was his being in the hold of a ship for two weeks with nothing but a . "..... .... '... ....... ' '\ '." ,......... '. " .' ' ,,:,...... '-, '...... .. "', '".........,,'.......... ", '....- .... . - . .;:, '- .'-... / & '.:: :. ;: ,.... . v 5:,. : .'. 'II . . - - -. .,. '.'\.. . .. ,1/ . . /" ._0- S .. ., J I , " V - - lJ.JAN ....' / _---- . 37 . BOUDOIR SET . In TAFFETA * T A F F FT.-\., it seems, is intimately tied up with the psychology of sleep. So is color. Understanding such mysteries, Sloane has worked out this Celanese* taffeta bedroom set in colors that are smart from the decorator's point-of-view and almost mesmeric in their restfulness. You can get matching curtains, dressing-table skirt, and bedspread in the Drapery Department. . . custom-made at ready-made prices. Fourth Floor. /fj" 1''' 1 '' 1 ,;;; , . "1' >1,'" .. .. '" ::: ,"... .': :":-:.:.: @ "":::'::: 1 ': ....... . :::::;'.:.::: " ,:,,< .t, \' :: :::: t /: . :{: : . . :.. . . . . . : . )*" . :;\ r . t . :i: tft;1.Â1 P '-g - ...þ.'::: .' i![ : :.:>g:};:: m "\i:!::;: :::::::. '::"":'):Î ;i1iiJ:; ; .; : i ? 111 ::.=:::: 'Y . tl . ' . : , ;f , ! . fi R "":":ff: -:.:. .)": ...:-.... .;:, :: : t :::. :::.:: f&J.;.*i ;i t;,:.,... " ":,.:. . .<,:'. . ... . ,:éjfitit9ì1t :.: :;;,:,:/rtj ':i: : ...... , .. -- . ....::.::::..._:.:-: .:. : ..<< ") : ,::::I;0!: 'ii!!!: \ :(:t:;:;;:,:.. . . '* , '4\ l:l ... . .."' ; '! ì\l... I:::" ,::@l?$h:, Curtains, sateen lined, pinch-pleated tops... $14.50. Dressing-tahle skirt, adjustahle... $12.50. Bedspreads, sateen It.ned. . . $14.50 each. All in Celanese* taffeta, choice of nine CBI()Ts. Standard sizes. *Reg. u. s. Pat. M. W&J Sloane FIFTH AVENUE AT 47TH · NEW YORK